
From the World Wisdom online library: www.worldwisdom.com/public/library/default.aspx chapter 1 Some Universal Aspects of Judaism1 Like all revealed religions and traditions, Judaism contains aspects which give it its special character and which constitute by definition its own way of affirming the Absolute. Its particularity involves the laws and rites specific to Israel, determined to a large extent by that nation’s ethnological relationship with God, by the vocation of the “Chosen People” and by their sacred history. But if we examine the “doctrine” (Torah) of Judaism closely, as revealed by the Bible—or more precisely by its first part, known to Christians as the Old Testament—as well as by its traditional exegeses, exoteric and esoteric, we will uncover the universal foundation by which the Jewish religion is linked to all other genuine religions. This foundation, this common essence, is the real affirmation of the pure and supreme Reality, an affirmation through which man consciously binds himself to the only True and Real, an at- tachment destined to spiritualize man and finally reintegrate him with the Divine Absolute. Universal Aspects of Monotheism and Messianism In Judaism, this unitive affirmation of the Absolute takes on the mono- theistic form which the Bible traces back to Abraham and, through Shem, Noah and their ancestors, to Adam, the first man. This mono- theism was restored and crystallized by way of the Sinaitic theophany in the form of Mosaism, which came into being to save Jewish souls of every generation, starting with the one which Moses led, and to unite spiritually the elite2 amongst them with the One—the ultimate mono- theistic aim. Now, if this salvation and union could have been real- ized in principle in all post-Mosaic epochs, the Jewish prophets who have extended and revitalized Mosaism have in particular proclaimed the coming at the end of time of him who will bring the “lost tribes of Israel” back to the city of God and, with them, all non-Jews who 1 Editor’s note: This article originally appeared in English as a chapter in the book The Unanimous Tradition (Colombo: Sri Lanka Institute of Traditional Studies, 1991), edited by Ranjit Fernando. We have added the section headings and reformatted por- tions of the essay. 2 Editor’s note: The author uses the word “elite” here to refer to the most holy, or sanc- tified seekers after God in those faiths, those who have attained the highest spiritual stations. 1 � universal aspects of the kabbalah and judaism might wish to follow them in such a return to and union with the One who is actually present in the mystical Jerusalem. It is here a question of the coming of him who in Psalm 2 is called both the “Anointed” (Mashiach, Messiah) and the “Son” (Ben) of God. To the monotheism of Israel is thus joined the other fundamental and universal aspect of its religion: messianism. That monotheism and messianism are by nature truly universal springs from their universalization by Christianity and Islam. It was Islam that universalized Semitic monotheism to the highest degree by making it return, through its Abrahamic main-stem, to its Adamic or primordial root. In fact, Islam freed monotheism from the necessity for ethnic “election”; that is, from the need to belong to a “chosen” people in order to unite with the One. It also freed it from a worship dedicated to trinitarian and messianic intermediaries between human- ity and the absolute Divinity. It allows every man to make contact with the one and universal God without any of these preliminary condi- tions. As to Christianity, its credo in unum Deum (“I believe in one God”) implies the affirmation of the Trinity, and in particular of the “son incarnate,” an affirmation completed in practice by recourse to the intercession of the Virgin Mary. It also involves the belief that Jesus of Nazareth, conceived by the Holy Ghost and born of the Virgin Mary, was crucified and, having risen from the dead after his descent into Hell, ascended into Heaven, whence he will come again to judge the living and the dead. Finally, it involves the belief that the “son of God,” according to the Psalm already cited, is also the Messiah (Mashiach), the “Anointed,” or in Greek Christós. The Christian religion, whilst uni- versalizing the monotheistic faith of Israel, thus eminently represents the universalization of its messianism, which is etymologically what the term “Christianity” means. Christianity itself testifies everywhere in the Gospel to its having been proclaimed, and to a certain extent foreshadowed, by Judaism; and the Koran reveals that Islam came into being in order, amongst other things, to confirm the truth and saving power, not only of the Mosaic but also of the Christian revelation, both of them, in essence, at one with the pure monotheism of Abraham, which the Islamic message itself in- sistently calls to witness. If the Koran makes any criticism of Jews and Christians, it is precisely in respect of their deviations from the simple affirmation of the One made by Abraham. Unlike Judaism, Islam, with- out in its own heart interposing any messianic screen whatever between God and man—whom it calls upon to unite directly with that God— identifies Jesus of Nazareth with the Messiah al-Masīh( ) proclaimed by 2 � some universal aspects of judaism the Jewish prophets, and furthermore, with the “Word” (Kalimah) and the “Spirit” (Rūh) of God, “directed at Mary,” the Virgin whom “no man has touched” (see Koran 4:171; 3:47). But it does this without sharing the Christian doctrine of the “son of God” and his “incarnation,” thus cautioning Christians against the “divinization” of the man Jesus and his mother, as well as against a trinitarianism deviating into tritheism (see Koran 23:91; 4:171). Finally, the Koran (4:157) insists on the fact that the “crucified one” was not “with certainty” Jesus, that is to say in his “reality” or divine nature which is the “Word” and “Spirit” of God, di- rectly conveyed by his inner and incorruptible body, that of the transfig- uration and resurrection. His mortal and crucified body was that which according to the esoteric interpretation of the Koranic text “resembled” the inner and divine reality of Jesus. Besides, as we have just seen, this body which directly provided the vehicle for his human nature was not regarded by Islam as a “divine incarnation,” but as a simple “manifesta- tional support” (mazhar) of God, whose absoluteness does not permit being made relative by a “localization” (hulūl) in the flesh. Therefore, Jewish monotheism and messianism, though funda- mentally adopted by the independent revelations, direct or “vertical,” of Christianity and Islam, have at the same time been adapted by them in different ways according to the varying needs of the immense hu- man groups which they might reach before the end of time. To these different “variations on the same theme,” which are twofold (mono- theism complemented by messianism) and by nature universal, are added those which relate to the cosmology and anthropology of the Torah, two more doctrinal aspects whose universal character has in turn been revealed through their universalization by Christianity and Islam. It is this that was attested—despite the customary exclusivism of the Jews which treated these religions as simple “modifications” or deviations from Judaism—by the great spiritual authorities of Israel, like Maimonides (Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon, 1135–1204 C.E., called the “Eagle of the Synagogue”), who wrote in Yad Hasaqa (“The Strong Hand”): “Thanks to these new religions, the whole world is filled with the idea of a Redeemer-Messiah, and the words of the law and the Commandments; these words have spread to distant islands and amongst numerous peoples . all are now occupied with the Torah. .”. In fact, if the New Testament is regarded as an extension of the Old Testament, together constituting the Bible which in its entirety was “confirmed” by the Koran, the conclusion may be reached that a great part of the human race is “occupied with the Torah.” On every page of the Gospel are echoed the words of the Pentateuch, the Prophets, and 3 � universal aspects of the kabbalah and judaism the Hagiographs of Israel—thus its entire Holy Scripture—as also in the Koran from beginning to end. Before mentioning in this category of ideas the essential aspects of Mosaic cosmology and anthropology, universalized by Christian- ity and Islam, let us return for a moment to the fundamental truth that unites the three Semitic religions, namely, the monotheistic faith which, according to them all, goes back through Abraham, Shem, and Noah to Adam. In Judaism, it is affirmed by the opening words of the Decalogue: “I am YHVH,3 thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. Thou shalt have no other gods before Me” (Exod. 20:2–3). This very statement by the one God, together with the rejection of “other gods,” is repeated many times in the Torah, finally denying in Isaiah (45:5–6) reality to all that man—through his idola mentis—regards as being outside of Him who in truth alone is real: “I am YHVH and there is none else, there is no God beside Me. That they may know from the rising and the setting of the sun, that there is none beside Me” (ki-efes biladai). Here we have the ultimate spiritual conclusion of monotheism, which Jewish esoterism—the Qabbalah or direct “reception” of divine truth—takes literally, not by postulating as do the pantheists that ev- erything is God, but by affirming that everything is in God, the Infinite (Ein Sof) who, as we have just seen, has revealed Himself in the words, “There is none beside Me.” Thus, all is in Him, either essentially and absolutely in His pure transcendence or in the ontological and proto- typic state of His causal Being which is that of the Creator, or, yet again, as a created and transitory form in His cosmic omnipresence.
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